74 Neb. 157 | Neb. | 1905
In this suit the plaintiff seeks to have a trust declared and enforced with respect to certain real estate. The pleadings are unnecessarily voluminous, covering some 35 pages of tbe record. Reduced to their simplest form, tbe ultimate facts relied upon by the plaintiff to entitle him to tbe relief sought are: That tbe defendant, Benjamin D. Hayward, while under an oral contract of agency with the plaintiff to negotiate on behalf of the plaintiff for the purchase of certain real estate, negotiated therefor and bought the same for his own use and benefit, taking the title thereto in the name of the defendant Hay, his nephew, who later conveyed to the defendant Mary F. Hayward, the wife of defendant Benjamin D. Hayward, in trust and for the use of her said husband; that after-wards, the defendants Mary F. Hayward and Benjamin H. Hayward borrowed $1,200 of the defendant Paul, and as security therefor deposited the conveyance of the land from Hay to Mary F. Hayward, which had not been re
The contract of agency upon which the plaintiff relies rests wholly in parol, and no part of the consideration which the agent Hayward paid for the land was advanced by the plaintiff, and the principal contention of the defendants in this case is that it falls within the provisions of section 3 of our statute of frauds (ch. 32, Comp. St.), which is as follows: “No estate or interest in land, other than leases for a term not exceeding one year from the making thereof, nor any trust or power over or concerning lands, or in any manner relating thereto, shall hereafter be created, granted, assigned, surrendered or declared, unless by operation of law, or by a deed or conveyance in writing, subscribed by the party creating, granting, assigning, surrendering, or declaring the same.” Among other authorities supporting this contention are the following: Burden v. Sheridan, 36 Ia. 125; 2 Story, Equity Jurisprudence (13th ed.), secs. 1201, 1201a; 1 Perry, Trusts (5th ed.), sec. 135. The Iowa case just cited deserves more than a passing notice, because it is
If then it be competent, and we are clearly of the opinion that it is, to establish the contract of agency by parol testimony, the question then arises whether parol testimony is competent to establish the trust in this case, or whether the plaintiff will be relegated to his remedy at law for damages for breach of contract. Section 4 of our statute of frauds expressly provides that section 3 shall not be construed to prevent any trust from arising or being-extinguished by implication or operation of laAV. A similar provision exists in all the states. This provision includes all resulting and constructive trusts, or it might be said,
The case of Rose v. Hayden, 35 Kan. 106, like this case, was brought to enforce a trust in property which the plaintiff had bought in his own name and for his own use, while bound by an oral contract to purchase it for the plaintiff. The plaintiff had paid no part of the consideration. There the court discussed the statute of frauds as affecting cases of this kind at length, and held that the statute does not apply, and that the trust should be enforced. The case contains an interesting review of the loading authorities in this class of cases. Among the authorities cited is Jenkins v. Eldredge, 3 Story (U. S. C. C.), 181, 289, which was reported after the text from Story, supra, was written. In that case the learned judge says:
“It appears to me, that here a confidential relation of principal and agent did exist; and that being once shown, it disables the party from insisting upon the objection, that the trust is void, as being by parol. The very confidential relation of principal and agent has been treated, as for this purpose, a case sui generis. It is deemed a fraud for an agent to avail himself of his confidential relation to drive a bargain, or create an interest adverse*163 to that of his principal in the transaction; and that fraud creates a trust, even when the agency itself may be, nay must be, only by parol. Bartlett v. Pickers gill, 1 Eden (Eng.), 515; 1 Cox, Ch. (Eng.) 15; 4 East (Eng.), 577, note, and Leman v. Whitely, 4 Russ. (Eng.) *423, are, I admit, against this doctrine — not wholly, but to a’ limited extent; for the latter case excludes a case of fraud. But then Lees v. Nuttall, 1 Russ. & M. (Eng.), 53, expressly decides, that if an agent employed to purchase an estate, purchase for himself and on his own account, he becomes a trustee for the principal. In that case the whole agency and trust was made out by parol, and the purchase was from a third person. Carter v. Palmer, 1 Bligh (Eng ), 397, 418, goes the full length of the same proposition.”
Section 4 of our statute of frauds, as we have seen, expressly excepts from the operation of section 3 trusts which arise by implication or operation of law. In our opinion, the trust sought to be enforced in this case falls within that exception, and should be enforced. We are aware, as will be - seen from the foregoing, that there are authorities holding a contrary doctrine, but the reasoning upon which they are based is unsatisfactory, and 'contrary, Ave think, to the fundamental maxims of equity.
It is insisted that the evidence is insufficient to sustain a finding of any contract of agency between the plaintiff and HayAvard. To set out the evidence on this point Avould unduly extend this opinion, and after set out, the most that could be urged in behalf of the defendants would be that it is conflicting. The witnesses Avere before the trial court; that gave such court advantages in weighing their testimony AAdiich Ave do not possess, and even without alloAving for that advantage, we should hesitate, in vieAV of the entire record, to hold that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the finding. In this connection our attention is called to the fact that the plaintiff leased the land from the defendant Day after the latter had acquired the legal title. This fact, if unexplained, would
It is also urged that at the time the contract of agency was made, plaintiff knew that Hayward had the land for sale as the agent of the owner. It is not quite clear that Hayward was the agent for the owner of the land, but it does appear that he had listed it for sale at the request of a company which apparently was acting as agent of the owner, and plaintiff knew that fact. But it also appears that at the time plaintiff employed Hayward, he asked him, pointedly, whether there was any reason why he could not act for him in the purchase of the land, and was assured by Hayward that there was none. In the face of this statement we think the plaintiff had a right to assume that there was nothing in the terms on which the lands were listed with Hayward that would be inconsistent with Hayward’s acting for him in negotiating a purchase of the land. The mere listing of property with a broker for sale does not necessarily constitute the broker the owner’s agent to make the sale; under such circumstances the broker is frequently, and with perfect propriety, the agent, not of the owner, but of the purchaser.
It is strenuously urged that both Day and Mrs. Hayward are innocent purchasers, and took their respective titles in good faith, and not in trust for Benjamin D. Hayward. Day never advanced but $100 of'the purchase price. He never saw the land, and his contract therefor
Another contention of the defendants is that Mathiason and Kohler, respectively, are innocent purchasers, and are entitled to hold the land as against the plaintiff. So far as the money paid by them, or either of them, is concerned, they are fully protected by the decree. Mathiason had already transferred his interest to Kohler, .and the decree affects Kohler only in so far as it requires the conveyance of the land to the plaintiff, instead of to him. The decree provides for the payment to him of the amount he had invested in the land. But I neither Mathiason nor Kohler come under the general rule applicable to innocent purchasers. Neither of them had any legal title. Whatever title they had was purely equitable. It is a familiar rule of equity that where the equities are equal, that which is prior in point of time shall prevail. Elaborating on that rule in Boone v. Chiles, 10 Peters (U. S.), 176, the court say:
“A purchaser with notice may protect himself under a purchaser by deed Avithout notice; but cannot do it by*166 purchase from one who holds or claims by contract only; the cases are wholly distinct. In the former, the purchaser with notice is protected; in the latter, he has no standing in equity, for an obvious reason — that the plaintiff’s elder equity shall prevail, unless the defendant can shelter himself under the legal title, acquired by one whose conscience was not affected with fraud or notice, and who can impart his immunity to a guilty purchaser, as the representative of his legal rights, fairly acquired by deed, in such a manner as exempts him from the jurisdiction of court of equity.”
To the same effect are the following: Smith v. Orton, 18 L. ed. (U. S.) 62; Woods v. Dille, 11 Ohio, 455; Anketel v. Converse, 17 Ohio St. 11; Worden v. Crist, 106 Ill. 326.
As the plaintiff in this cause was first in time, under the well known maxim of equity, he must be held to be first in right.
In our opinion, the decree of the district court is just and equitable, and ought to be affirmed.
By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the decree of the district court is
Affirmed.
The following opinion on rehearing was filed April 5, 1906. Judgment of affirmance adhered to:
Because of Johnson’s knowledge that Hayward was acting for the Fidelity Trust Company of Kansas City,
In 1900 the plaintiff’s wife owned the northeast quarter of section 15, township 16, range 10 west, in Howard county, Nebraska. He bought of the owners of the fee the adjoining northwest quarter of section 14, 145 acres of which was subject to a mortgage held by one NeAvton. This mortgage was in process of foreclosure, a decree having been entered for $1,577.14, a sum in excess of the real value of the land at that date. Johnson desired this land, and was seeking the OAAner of the mortgage for the double purpose of saving the expense of-a sale on the decree of foreclosure and of purchasing the mortgagee’s right in the decree at what would be the fair cash value of the land. He was not able to get into communication Avith the parties representing NeAvton, and a sale under the decree took place, Newton being the purchaser and receiving the sheriff’s deed. The conditions then existing were these: Johnson’s wife owned the northeast quarter of section 15, Newton the west 145 acres of the northwest quarter of section 14 adjoining her on the east, and Johnson the east 15 acres of the northwest quarter of section 14, NeAxdon’s 145 acres lying betAveen the land owned by Johnson and Mrs. Johnson. Johnson desired the whole half-section, and in order to obtain time in
That he was acting as Johnson’s attorney in the appeal cannot be doubted, however strongly he may deny the fact. Previous to the time when the appeal should be perfected, Johnson, who lived in Omaha, was called to Alaska, and did not return until sometime in August. Hayward, who had received the money to perfect the ap
Hayward now says that the second offer made the Fidelity Trust Company of $1,4*00 for the land was made on behalf of Day, but in the meantime he had led-Johnson to believe that he was acting for him in the purchase. It clearly appears from the facts above stated that Hayward had no authority to make a sale of this land. At the most his employment by the Fidelity Trust Company was to act as a middleman to secure offers on the land and to bring the parties together.
Let us see. how the matter stood when the pretended sale was made to Day. Newton had become insane, and a guardian of his person and estate had been appointed. This terminated the agency of the Fidelity Company for Newton. The guardian employed that company to obtain a renewal of the offer of $1,400 for the land, and the company employed Hayward for the same purpose. The company and Hayward were not agents in the full sense of that term; they were middlemen to secure from a former proposed, purchaser the renewal of a former offer made for the land. They come fully within the definition of Chief Justice Dixon in Stewart v. Mather, 32 Wis. 344, where he says: “A broker whose undertaking merely is to find a purchaser at a price fixed by the seller, or at a price which shall be satisfactory to the seller when he and the purchaser meet, is in reality only a ‘middleman,’ whose duty is performed when the buyer and seller are brought together.” The case comes fully within the rule
Affirmed.